Yale Law School, The Allard K. Lowenstein International Human Rights Clinic, Turkey's Compliance with Its Obligations to the Ecumenical Patriarchate and Orthodox Christian Minority, Summary, February 3, 2005

June 2006: Religious Freedom and the Roberts Court

Professor Melissa Rogers, Director, Center for Religion and Public Affairs, Wake Forest University

Supplemental Reading:

Douglas Laycock, How to be Religiously Neutral, Legal Times (July 4, 2005)

Excerpts from Mitchell v. Helms, 530 U.S. 793 (2000)

May 2005: Faith, Morals and the Rule of Law

Professor William J. Stuntz, Professor of Law, Harvard Law School.Professor David A. Skeel, The S. Samuel Arsht Professor of Corporate Law, University of Pennsylvania Law School.

Supplemental Reading:

David A. Skeel and William J. Stuntz, Christianity and the (Modest) Rule of Law, U. Penn. J. Const. L. (forthcoming)

October 2004: Doing the Lord's Work: Christian Life in the Trade of Commercial Litigation

Roger G. Brooks, Esq., Cravath, Swaine & Moore.

Topics of discussion included Christian perspectives on integrity in the context of litigation, the legitimacy of spending time and energy on monetary disputes, and the allocation of one's time between work, familiy, church and respite.